Yusuke Tsukatani
Pennsylvania State University
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Featured researches published by Yusuke Tsukatani.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2012
A.M. Garcia Costas; Yusuke Tsukatani; W.I.C. Rijpstra; Stefan Schouten; Paula V. Welander; Roger E. Summons; Donald A. Bryant
Candidatus Chloracidobacterium thermophilum is a recently discovered chlorophototroph from the bacterial phylum Acidobacteria, which synthesizes bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) c and chlorosomes like members of the green sulfur bacteria (GSB) and the green filamentous anoxygenic phototrophs (FAPs). The pigments (BChl c homologs and carotenoids), quinones, lipids, and hopanoids of cells and chlorosomes of this new chlorophototroph were characterized in this study. Ca. Chloracidobacterium thermophilum methylates its antenna BChls at the C-8(2) and C-12(1) positions like GSB, but these BChls were esterified with a variety of isoprenoid and straight-chain alkyl alcohols as in FAPs. Unlike the chlorosomes of other green bacteria, Ca. Chloracidobacterium thermophilum chlorosomes contained two major xanthophyll carotenoids, echinenone and canthaxanthin. These carotenoids may confer enhanced protection against reactive oxygen species and could represent a specific adaptation to the highly oxic natural environment in which Ca. Chloracidobacterium thermophilum occurs. Dihydrogenated menaquinone-8 [menaquinone-8(H(2))], which probably acts as a quencher of energy transfer under oxic conditions, was an abundant component of both cells and chlorosomes of Ca. Chloracidobacterium thermophilum. The betaine lipid diacylglycerylhydroxymethyl-N,N,N-trimethyl-β-alanine, esterified with 13-methyl-tetradecanoic (isopentadecanoic) acid, was a prominent polar lipid in the membranes of both Ca. Chloracidobacterium thermophilum cells and chlorosomes. This lipid may represent a specific adaptive response to chronic phosphorus limitation in the mats. Finally, three hopanoids, diploptene, bacteriohopanetetrol, and bacteriohopanetetrol cyclitol ether, which may help to stabilize membranes during diel shifts in pH and other physicochemical conditions in the mats, were detected in the membranes of Ca. Chloracidobacterium thermophilum.
Photosynthesis Research | 2004
Yusuke Tsukatani; Katsumi Matsuura; Shinji Masuda; Keizo Shimada; Akira Hiraishi; Kenji V. P. Nagashima
To understand the evolutionary relationship between triheme and tetraheme cytochrome subunits in the reaction center complex, genes located downstream of that coding for the M subunit of the reaction center complex (pufM) were amplified by PCR and analyzed in six established and two unidentified species of the genus Rhodovulum and five species of the genus Rhodobacter. All the Rhodovulum species tested had the pufC gene coding for the reaction-center-bound cytochrome subunit, while all the Rhodobacter species were found to have the pufX gene at the corresponding position. Analyses of the amino acid sequences of the pufC gene products showed that the cytochrome subunits of all the Rhodovulum species have three heme-binding-motifs and lack a methionine residue probably working as the sixth axial-ligand to one of the three hemes. Phylogenetic relationships among Rhodovulum species based on the pufC gene products were basically consistent with those based on 16S rRNA sequences, suggesting that the basic characteristics of the triheme cytochrome subunit have been conserved during the evolutionary process of the Rhodovulum species.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2011
Amaya M. Garcia Costas; Yusuke Tsukatani; Steven P. Romberger; Gert T. Oostergetel; Egbert J. Boekema; John H. Golbeck; Donald A. Bryant
Chlorosomes are sac-like, light-harvesting organelles that characteristically contain very large numbers of bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) c, d, or e molecules. These antenna structures occur in chlorophototrophs belonging to some members of the Chlorobi and Chloroflexi phyla and are also found in a recently discovered member of the phylum Acidobacteria, Candidatus Chloracidobacterium thermophilum. Ca. Chloracidobacterium thermophilum is the first aerobic organism discovered to possess chlorosomes as light-harvesting antennae for phototrophic growth. Chlorosomes were isolated from Ca. Chloracidobacterium thermophilum and subjected to electron microscopic, spectroscopic, and biochemical analyses. The chlorosomes of Ca. Chloracidobacterium thermophilum had an average size of ∼100 by 30 nm. Cryo-electron microscopy showed that the BChl c molecules formed folded or twisted, sheet-like structures with a lamellar spacing of ∼2.3 nm. Unlike the BChls in the chlorosomes of the green sulfur bacterium Chlorobaculum tepidum, concentric cylindrical nanotubes were not observed. Chlorosomes of Ca. Chloracidobacterium thermophilum contained a homolog of CsmA, the BChl a-binding, baseplate protein; CsmV, a protein distantly related to CsmI, CsmJ, and CsmX of C. tepidum, which probably binds a single [2Fe-2S] cluster; and five unique polypeptides (CsmR, CsmS, CsmT, CsmU, and a type II NADH dehydrogenase homolog). Although Ca. Chloracidobacterium thermophilum is an aerobe, energy transfer among the BChls in these chlorosomes was very strongly quenched in the presence of oxygen (as measured by quenching of fluorescence emission). The combined analyses showed that the chlorosomes of Ca. Chloracidobacterium thermophilum possess a number of unique features but also share some properties with the chlorosomes found in anaerobic members of other phyla.
Photosynthesis Research | 2010
Yusuke Tsukatani; Jianzhong Wen; Robert E. Blankenship; Donald A. Bryant
Candidatus Chloracidobacterium (Cab.) thermophilum is a recently discovered aerobic chlorophototroph belonging to the phylum Acidobacteria. From analyses of genomic sequence data, this organism was inferred to have type-1 homodimeric reaction centers, chlorosomes, and the bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) a-binding Fenna–Matthews–Olson protein (FMO). Here, we report the purification and characterization of Cab. thermophilum FMO. Absorption, fluorescence emission, and CD spectra of the FMO protein were measured at room temperature and at 77xa0K. The spectroscopic features of this FMO protein were different from those of the FMO protein of green sulfur bacteria (GSB) and suggested that exciton coupling of the BChls in the FMO protein is weaker than in FMO of GSB especially at room temperature. HPLC analysis of the pigments extracted from the FMO protein only revealed the presence of BChl a esterified with phytol. Despite the distinctive spectroscopic properties, the residues known to bind BChl a molecules in the FMO of GSB are well conserved in the primary structure of the Cab. thermophilum FMO protein. This suggests that the FMO of Cab. thermophilum probably also binds seven or possibly eight BChl a(P) molecules. The results imply that, without changing pigment composition or structure dramatically, the FMO protein has acquired properties that allow it to perform light harvesting efficiently under aerobic conditions.
Photosynthesis Research | 2009
Chihiro Azai; Yusuke Tsukatani; Jiro Harada; Hirozo Oh-oka
A mutant devoid of cytochrome c-554 (CT0075) in Chlorobiumxa0tepidum (syn. Chlorobaculumxa0tepidum) exhibited a decreased growth rate but normal growth yield when compared to the wild type. From quantitative determinations of sulfur compounds in media, the mutant was found to oxidize thiosulfate more slowly than the wild type but completely to sulfate as the wild type. This indicates that cytochrome c-554 would increase the rate of thiosulfate oxidation by serving as an efficient electron carrier but is not indispensable for thiosulfate oxidation itself. On the other hand, mutants in which a portion of the soxB gene (CT1021) was replaced with the aacC1 cassette did not grow at all in a medium containing only thiosulfate as an electron source. They exhibited partial growth yields in media containing only sulfide when compared to the wild type. This indicates that SoxB is not only essential for thiosulfate oxidation but also responsible for sulfide oxidation. An alternative electron carrier or electron transfer path would thus be operating between the Sox system and the reaction center in the mutant devoid of cytochrome c-554. Cytochrome c-554 might function in any other pathway(s) as well as the thiosulfate oxidation one, since even green sulfur bacteria that cannot oxidize thiosulfate contain a cycA gene encoding this electron carrier.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2011
Jianzhong Wen; Yusuke Tsukatani; Weidong Cui; Hao Zhang; Michael L. Gross; Donald A. Bryant; Robert E. Blankenship
The Fenna-Matthews-Olson protein (FMO) binds seven or eight bacteriochlorophyll a (BChl a) molecules and is an important model antenna system for understanding pigment-protein interactions and mechanistic aspects of photosynthetic light harvesting. FMO proteins of green sulfur bacteria (Chlorobiales) have been extensively studied using a wide range of spectroscopic and theoretical approaches because of their stability, the spectral resolution of their pigments, their water-soluble nature, and the availability of high-resolution structural data. We obtained new structural and spectroscopic insights by studying the FMO protein from the recently discovered, aerobic phototrophic acidobacterium, Candidatus Chloracidobacterium thermophilum. Native C. thermophilum FMO is a trimer according to both analytical gel filtration and native-electrospray mass spectrometry. Furthermore, the mass of intact FMO trimer is consistent with the presence of 21-24 BChl a in each. Homology modeling of the C. thermophilum FMO was performed by using the structure of the FMO protein from Chlorobaculum tepidum as a template. C. thermophilum FMO differs from C. tepidum FMO in two distinct regions: the baseplate, CsmA-binding region and a region that is proposed to bind the reaction center subunit, PscA. C. thermophilum FMO has two fluorescence emission peaks at room temperature but only one at 77K. Temperature-dependent fluorescence spectroscopy showed that the two room-temperature emission peaks result from two excited-state BChl a populations that have identical fluorescence lifetimes. Modeling of the data suggests that the two populations contain 1-2 BChl and 5-6 BChl a molecules and that thermal equilibrium effects modulate the relative population of the two emitting states.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2013
Peter G. Adams; Ashley J. Cadby; Benjamin Robinson; Yusuke Tsukatani; Marcus Tank; Jianzhong Wen; Robert E. Blankenship; Donald A. Bryant; C. Neil Hunter
Chlorosomes, the major antenna complexes in green sulphur bacteria, filamentous anoxygenic phototrophs, and phototrophic acidobacteria, are attached to the cytoplasmic side of the inner cell membrane and contain thousands of bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) molecules that harvest light and channel the energy to membrane-bound reaction centres. Chlorosomes from phototrophs representing three different phyla, Chloroflexus (Cfx.) aurantiacus, Chlorobaculum (Cba.) tepidum and the newly discovered Candidatus (Ca.) Chloracidobacterium (Cab.) thermophilum were analysed using PeakForce Tapping atomic force microscopy (PFT-AFM). Gentle PFT-AFM imaging in buffered solutions that maintained the chlorosomes in a near-native state revealed ellipsoids of variable size, with surface bumps and undulations that differ between individual chlorosomes. Cba. tepidum chlorosomes were the largest (133×57×36nm; 141,000nm(3) volume), compared with chlorosomes from Cfx. aurantiacus (120×44×30nm; 84,000nm(3)) and Ca. Cab. thermophilum (99×40×31nm; 65,000nm(3)). Reflecting the contributions of thousands of pigment-pigment stacking interactions to the stability of these supramolecular assemblies, analysis by nanomechanical mapping shows that chlorosomes are highly stable and that their integrity is disrupted only by very strong forces of 1000-2000pN. AFM topographs of Ca. Cab. thermophilum chlorosomes that had retained their attachment to the cytoplasmic membrane showed that this membrane dynamically changes shape and is composed of protrusions of up to 30nm wide and 6nm above the mica support, possibly representing different protein domains. Spectral imaging revealed significant heterogeneity in the fluorescence emission of individual chlorosomes, likely reflecting the variations in BChl c homolog composition and internal arrangements of the stacked BChls within each chlorosome.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004
Jean Alric; Yusuke Tsukatani; Makoto Yoshida; Katsumi Matsuura; Keizo Shimada; Rainer Hienerwadel; Barbara Schoepp-Cothenet; Wolfgang Nitschke; Kenji V. P. Nagashima; André Verméglio
The cytochrome bound to the photosynthetic reaction center of Rhodovulum sulfidophilum presents two unusual characteristics with respect to the well characterized tetraheme cytochromes. This cytochrome contains only three hemes because it lacks the peptide motif CXXCH, which binds the most distal fourth heme. In addition, we show that the sixth axial ligand of the third heme is a cysteine (Cys-148) instead of the usual methionine ligand. This ligand exchange results in a very low midpoint potential (–160 ± 10 mV). The influence of the unusual cysteine ligand on the midpoint potential of this distal heme was further investigated by site-directed mutagenesis. The midpoint potential of this heme is upshifted to +310 mV when cysteine 148 is replaced by methionine, in agreement with the typical redox properties of a His/Met coordinated heme. Because of the large increase in the midpoint potential of the distal heme in the mutant, both the native and modified high potential hemes are photooxidized at a redox poise where only the former is photooxidizable in the wild type. The relative orientation of the three hemes, determined by EPR measurements, is shown different from tetraheme cytochromes. The evolutionary basis of the concomitant loss of the fourth heme and the down-conversion of the third heme is discussed in light of phylogenetic relationships of the Rhodovulum species triheme cytochromes to other reaction center-associated tetraheme cytochromes.
Photosynthesis Research | 2010
Chihiro Azai; Yusuke Tsukatani; Shigeru Itoh; Hirozo Oh-oka
Green sulfur bacteria and heliobacteria are strictly anaerobic phototrophs that have homodimeric type 1 reaction center complexes. Within these complexes, highly reducing substances are produced through an initial charge separation followed by electron transfer reactions driven by light energy absorption. In order to attain efficient energy conversion, it is important for the photooxidized reaction center to be rapidly rereduced. Green sulfur bacteria utilize reduced inorganic sulfur compounds (sulfide, thiosulfate, and/or sulfur) as electron sources for their anoxygenic photosynthetic growth. Membrane-bound and soluble cytochromes c play essential roles in the supply of electrons from sulfur oxidation pathways to the P840 reaction center. In the case of gram-positive heliobacteria, the photooxidized P800 reaction center is rereduced by cytochrome c-553 (PetJ) whose N-terminal cysteine residue is modified with fatty acid chains anchored to the cytoplasmic membrane.
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2009
Yusuke Tsukatani; Nahomi Nakayama; Keizo Shimada; Hiroyuki Mino; Shigeru Itoh; Katsumi Matsuura; Satoshi Hanada; Kenji V. P. Nagashima
A blue-copper protein auracyanin of the filamentous anoxygenic phototroph Roseiflexus castenholzii was purified and characterized. Genomic sequence analysis showed that R. castenholzii has only one auracyanin, whereas Chloroflexus aurantiacus is known to have two auracyanins, A and B. Absorption spectrum of the Roseiflexus auracyanin was similar to that of auracyanin B of C. aurantiacus. On the other hand, ESR spectrum of the Roseiflexus auracyanin resembles that of auracyanin A of C. aurantiacus. These results suggest that the blue-copper protein auracyanin from R. castenholzii shares features with each of auracyanin A and B. Amino acid sequence alignment of auracyanins from filamentous anoxygenic phototrophs also demonstrated the chimeral feature of the primary structure of the Roseiflexus auracyanin, i.e., auracyanin A-like amino-terminal characteristics and auracyanin B-like one-residue spacing at the Cu-binding loop in the carboxyl-terminus.
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National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
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